The next morning we stocked up on new chains, replaced our embarassing old ones, and hopped on the overnight ferry to Newfoundland. Will would turn 23 years old on that ferry, and slept a sound 4 hours on the floor before we set out to tackle all 900 kms of newfoundland in 9 days.
NL
The road from Port-aux-Basques to St. John's is just that, one road, and at points it is quite barren. We went the first 200 kilometers and saw more moosen (4) than we had seen stores (2 gas stations). Another interesting fact is that if you were to draw a line directly from Port-aux-Basques to St. John's it would head directly East. Our first two days in Newfoundland, however, had us going directly north, which of course meant that we would have to spend that much time to get back south enough.
The moosen built this fence so that we wouldn't bike on their turf
The trek to St. John's also featured some really cold and wet weather. We did not see the sun at all while in Newfoundland, and would wake up most days to puddles of water inside of our shoes. The first 30 or so kilometers would be the hardest. Our feet and hands would go numb from being so wet and so cold, but we would eventually warm up and would still manage to average just under 100 kms a day.
The sunniest moment of Newfoundland (it was behind a mountain)
We would still take some time to take in the scenery though, as shown in this video of scenic Gambo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMLQgQrr9Jk&feature=youtu.be . Additionally, we had a day with excessive amounts of fog and it felt like we were on another planet, one with a lot of fog, but otherwise very similar to earth and specifically newfoundlandish. A very weird feeling indeed.
Breathtaking scenery
One day, winds were in excess of 57 km per hour. This means that had it been near a school zone, the wind could have gotten a ticket for speeding and would be the recipient of many frowns from onlookers, not that either of us know what that's like, but we suspect the wind should be ashamed of itself for that. Nonetheless, we eventually made it to St john's and were lucky enough to camp in the backyard of Will's cousin Michelle's place while she was away in another part of Newfoundland. St. John's is a really nice city. From far it looks like its a really big town, but it has many of the same amenities you'd expect from a city, including a vibrant nightlife which we took the liberty of exploring. One street in particular, George street, is considered the street with the most amount of bars per square foot in all of either the world or North America, or Canada, or something. The point is there are a lot of bars that the newfies love to frequent and make the most of.
On June 9th, we packed our bikes up and flew to Vancouver. The flight, including a short layover in Toronto, took all of 10 hours. We covered the distance that is taking us 3 months by bike, in 10 hours by plane. We dont know what to make of that. When we arrived in Vancouver we were greeted by Brian and Audrey who welcomed us into their home. The showers, clean laundry, and home cooked meals were a welcome change from the cold tent-life in Newfoundland.
One box per bike and an additional box for our bags, tent, and air mattresses.
Will and Harry just about to bike through Stanley Park
We are now heading to potentially the most difficult, yet scenic portion of our trip...the world-famous Rock Mountains.
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ReplyDeleteCongrats on finishing the east portion of your biking adventure! Way to stick it out in the cold, rain and fog. At least you had moose to cuddle with. Glad to hear the weather is better and sunnier in Vancouver. It's weird to see you guys without your orange jackets in the last pic. You look like normal civilians.
ReplyDeleteBig congrats on the national media coverage by Macleans! Mark profiled you in the coverage wtih quotes, pics and the whole story. That's amazing! I do think the orange jackets deserve to be on the front cover. The question is, which Hollywood actors would profile you guys? :)
Hope you had enough rest before hitting the Rocky Mountains, you can do it! Big hugs, Po.